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Jul 7, 2017
07/17
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kill the law, and he reduces the vigor -- reduces the law and vigor of the law and unseen things can not dictate the law. the laws are not there to simply follow the day-to-day lives of our country. they are there to deal with the deep trends, the big changes, the key debates, to give to set a course. to set a course obviously supports the beginning of a mandate but passing fewer laws gives us more time to focus on the laws that really fill the gaps or which meet new needs. that is the role of parliament. fewer laws using parliamentary time better means reserving more time for monitoring and evaluating public policies. i know that many of you have thought about this, and i don't underestimate the progress that has been made over the last few years in this regard but we must go further because passing a law is not the first and the most important acts of parliament. our societies have become too complex and to speedy for our laws to achieve their full aims without hitting against, coming up against, the principle of reality. the voices of the peoples must be heard, and they can not, t
kill the law, and he reduces the vigor -- reduces the law and vigor of the law and unseen things can not dictate the law. the laws are not there to simply follow the day-to-day lives of our country. they are there to deal with the deep trends, the big changes, the key debates, to give to set a course. to set a course obviously supports the beginning of a mandate but passing fewer laws gives us more time to focus on the laws that really fill the gaps or which meet new needs. that is the role of...
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May 10, 2022
05/22
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law enforcement had to secure around the supreme court itself. to replace with of the rule of law. it criminalizes pickets or parades with the intent of influencing any judge, juror, witness or court officer at locations that include you judges residents. attorney general of the justice department was quick to treat but curiously i haven't heard any announcementhe about how the dojmi may handle these intimidation tactics aimed directly at federal judges. the president's statement about the leak didn't condone it. the press secretary repeated to endorse the rallies in the residence as long as they don't turn intovi outright violence. the senior senator from massachusetts was on the steps and shouted, quote. they are renewing the call to break the senate to pack the court. they want to destroy two for the cost of one. one professor helped summarize the missions as follows. he explained this past weekend the difference between the pressure campaign and a january 6th riot is that in this case, the mob is right. so it has generated this and what is the armageddon over which democrats wa
law enforcement had to secure around the supreme court itself. to replace with of the rule of law. it criminalizes pickets or parades with the intent of influencing any judge, juror, witness or court officer at locations that include you judges residents. attorney general of the justice department was quick to treat but curiously i haven't heard any announcementhe about how the dojmi may handle these intimidation tactics aimed directly at federal judges. the president's statement about the leak...
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4.0
Mar 1, 2021
03/21
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host: i also published on the topic of fashion and maybe even presented at your law school. and the one thing i noted doing these presentations with colleagues that her academic colleagues is a shocking number of people, disproportionate number of people would say i know nothing about fashion whether women or men. and then they wouldn't claim knowledge but academics generally don't disclaim knowledge they would say i have some background so it's very curious. and reading your book you very much engage with the idea academics would say i need to say i don't know because it's not an important topic. is trivial. it's not serious. so what do you say to encounter that paradoxical mood? >> absolutely. that they will not have knowledge of anything. it's the idea it is superficial not even trivial but superficial into care indicates you are a frivolous person and unworthy of scholarly attention of the topics that we care about. i do think there is a reverse snobbery. in today's environment a historical transformation when knowledge it was a sign of power and status and something jea
host: i also published on the topic of fashion and maybe even presented at your law school. and the one thing i noted doing these presentations with colleagues that her academic colleagues is a shocking number of people, disproportionate number of people would say i know nothing about fashion whether women or men. and then they wouldn't claim knowledge but academics generally don't disclaim knowledge they would say i have some background so it's very curious. and reading your book you very much...
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Nov 28, 2017
11/17
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neighbors don't want us to fall into the day today lying and we must guarantee through the rule of law and making people responsible our strength and republic based on civility and equal relationships in men and women. we must altogether and i don't want to have relationships where every relationship is a source of suspicion we are not a puritanical we have to preserve our republican treasure and we must restore this dignity and make sure the shame changes so i made a commitment on my five year term should be equality of men and women. the first is the fight against violence against women. we must mobilize resources and take action. we need to reach the highest level ever, the financial grants are ready rising by 13% and will be preserved throughout the five year term. there should not be any cuts at all. this dedicated to gender equality because it is also going to be raised to reach 420 million euros by 2018. this cannot be reduced to figures. 's action private the and ministers here and i know you're busy people in your presence here shows your commitment in your will to take action
neighbors don't want us to fall into the day today lying and we must guarantee through the rule of law and making people responsible our strength and republic based on civility and equal relationships in men and women. we must altogether and i don't want to have relationships where every relationship is a source of suspicion we are not a puritanical we have to preserve our republican treasure and we must restore this dignity and make sure the shame changes so i made a commitment on my five year...
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Oct 27, 2022
10/22
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bits of law designed and the laws are framed in the way to tackle generic problems rather than technologies and an issue. congress actually used to have a specific advisory body with scientific issues to abolish inte the nineties but the problem is bigger than that. you need an entire government and those whose sole job it is to anticipate regulatory issues in the digital space and how you can manage without that and then how to have a department n for education and health if you accept the premise of the argument it is mad to treat that on the ship of state. but fundamentally why do i do what i do why do i talk about this stuff? i'm not going to be an apologist going to change it. what do i take encouragement from and 20 years ago it wasn't cool or mainstream political issue and when they are asked about to be salient what's politics only with the things that 20 years of solid campaigning and the effect of it becoming clear and those that they talk about. and then try to. >> so with that technical solution and had a prediction and then basically newt gingrich decided that if he asked the c
bits of law designed and the laws are framed in the way to tackle generic problems rather than technologies and an issue. congress actually used to have a specific advisory body with scientific issues to abolish inte the nineties but the problem is bigger than that. you need an entire government and those whose sole job it is to anticipate regulatory issues in the digital space and how you can manage without that and then how to have a department n for education and health if you accept the...
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Jan 6, 2013
01/13
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today in the law school the first loss to -- law student needed a breathing tube and the dog to guide her because she was legally blind. people did not talk to her. they figured she was stupid and shoe is also a gifted actress. now instructors are aware they should not exclude people from conversation just because they are disturbing even including teret's syndrome pledges a disturbing. and try to do the job better. prominently through my students that was legally blind the third argument it is a symbol of male domination and objectification of women and will treat them as a mere interchangeable object. but the people who make the argument don't know much about is long and do not know what symbolizes what but the more glaring flaw is the society is giving many images that treat women as a sex object pornography, a nude photos transparent clothing or tight jeans and all of these that may be argued treat within as objects. women are encouraged to market themselves with male objectification and it has been observed a way to rob wind of agency. i have written several articles myself one i
today in the law school the first loss to -- law student needed a breathing tube and the dog to guide her because she was legally blind. people did not talk to her. they figured she was stupid and shoe is also a gifted actress. now instructors are aware they should not exclude people from conversation just because they are disturbing even including teret's syndrome pledges a disturbing. and try to do the job better. prominently through my students that was legally blind the third argument it is...
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Oct 8, 2022
10/22
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couple things, alexander and sui i-uppercase-letter the suprh court not only to uphold their 15 week law protecting babies after 15 weeks in the womb, they aasked the court to overturn re and casey which is a bold move which the attorney general deserved credit for conventional wisdom told us not to do, is go for it and asked to uphold the 15 week bill. wewe could count of five i think conservatives have been burned so many times it was cautious. always prepare for the worst. so even after the leak there's still a chance the chief pulled over someone so friday morning 10:10 a.m. the log is refreshing in the website refreshing, it was great, actually happening. it's not when the football is kicked away one more time on charlie brown but now you have to work that much harder. we should celebrate, give thanks to the past 49 years of activists who made this possible and be cognizant that there are people whose names will never be people whoand labored largely unknown to us kept the cause alive laid the foundation. every argument we rehearse of the book someone else originally developed. fift
couple things, alexander and sui i-uppercase-letter the suprh court not only to uphold their 15 week law protecting babies after 15 weeks in the womb, they aasked the court to overturn re and casey which is a bold move which the attorney general deserved credit for conventional wisdom told us not to do, is go for it and asked to uphold the 15 week bill. wewe could count of five i think conservatives have been burned so many times it was cautious. always prepare for the worst. so even after the...
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Oct 13, 2013
10/13
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. >> host: the other half of your book is about the international human rights law. when did human rights laws start becoming part of this discussion on the slave trade? >> well, really around the turn of then 19th century. but what is really interesting is people think that international human rights law is the product of the 20th 20th century. in most hoff the congestional comes people say it was right after world were 2. so he holocaust happened. as news of that came out a butch of things happened right after world war ii, the nuremberg trials, similar trials in the far east. the u.n. was founded, universal declaration of human rights. that's the moment when people said this is when international law started to look at human rights issues. actually it was earlier in connection with the slave trade, that international law was first used for human rights purpose, and in the early 19th century in 107 and 1808, when countries like the u.s. -- britain banned the slave trade around then -- and it gap to spread throughout the countries that had been engaged in the slave
. >> host: the other half of your book is about the international human rights law. when did human rights laws start becoming part of this discussion on the slave trade? >> well, really around the turn of then 19th century. but what is really interesting is people think that international human rights law is the product of the 20th 20th century. in most hoff the congestional comes people say it was right after world were 2. so he holocaust happened. as news of that came out a butch...
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Dec 26, 2015
12/15
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that was the first day of law school. there are still too many lawyers, the profession is overcrowded and a lot of lawyers are not needed, there are too many of them. we need far more lawyers in the public sector, nonprofits, public interest lawyers, we need more lawyers who are willing to work for nonprofits, inmates wrongly convicted and thousands of innocent people in prison, no access to hart senate office building years, there's a lot of need for lawyers in our society but those jobs and attract a lot of interest usually. the model of big law, you go to work as an associate for the big firms and you put in 100 hour weeks for seven or eight years, that is still a mayor. i am not sure it is what it once was. one big change in the last 25 years has been the proliferation of television advertising. to me is unseemly and a lot of that -- they just -- sleazy, begging for cases. that has changed a lot in the last 25 years. some things had to change about the profession. >> host: of this changes reflected in your book? you i
that was the first day of law school. there are still too many lawyers, the profession is overcrowded and a lot of lawyers are not needed, there are too many of them. we need far more lawyers in the public sector, nonprofits, public interest lawyers, we need more lawyers who are willing to work for nonprofits, inmates wrongly convicted and thousands of innocent people in prison, no access to hart senate office building years, there's a lot of need for lawyers in our society but those jobs and...
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107
Sep 29, 2013
09/13
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that is how law school got contaminated. have to go back to the 1800s but one thing they imported with all due respect was this bad idea from 1905 law of the french republic. >> you were -- neither of us were there. not to blame. you are off the hook. >> the thing about liberalism is they pretend to be tolerant but are so intolerant of religion. >> at least of certain kinds. they have no problem tolerating as i have written elsewhere any religion but christianity. there is a reason for that and i wrote some articles about that. why can't liberals understand what islam is up to? they have a long history of because liberalism is defined historically against christianity, and nineteenth century lift of other religions as superior to or at least equal to christianity where the studies of religions came from. and any religion as better than christianity or at least equally good to knock christianity of of its central pedestal in the culture. and continue to go out trees. and out of a public square. against christianity, and the b
that is how law school got contaminated. have to go back to the 1800s but one thing they imported with all due respect was this bad idea from 1905 law of the french republic. >> you were -- neither of us were there. not to blame. you are off the hook. >> the thing about liberalism is they pretend to be tolerant but are so intolerant of religion. >> at least of certain kinds. they have no problem tolerating as i have written elsewhere any religion but christianity. there is a...
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0.0
Aug 19, 2022
08/22
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you just never know obviously the laws are changing when laws are one —- when lives are being saved we have to make sure that the stories are told. d and then to focus on the good so this is live stream to be watched after-the-fact in c-span will air this. not everyone agrees with us. that can you speak to that person who thinks we're all trying to impress women? is like a microcosm. but theou whole time i have been writing aboutnd this issue thinking about the idea that has been germinating for the human life that is the fundamental harm of abortion and everything we can to stop that but if that's true then how can it be a victory for women? how can you be good for fathers are the grandparents are the brothers or sisters who anyone to live in a society and that is any set of problems to i kill the most vulnerable among us? why was a few believe abortion is necessary think about why. and then to perpetrate violence for human beings. >> it's where parties need to grow in on those matters that we c agree with with some paid family leave bill and community health centers need support i kn
you just never know obviously the laws are changing when laws are one —- when lives are being saved we have to make sure that the stories are told. d and then to focus on the good so this is live stream to be watched after-the-fact in c-span will air this. not everyone agrees with us. that can you speak to that person who thinks we're all trying to impress women? is like a microcosm. but theou whole time i have been writing aboutnd this issue thinking about the idea that has been germinating...
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Jul 1, 2013
07/13
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eye 71
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" published by oxford stanford law professor jenny martinez is the author. you are watching booktv on c-span2. >> on your screen is a new book him called the romney's family table. when did you find time to put this together? >> oddly enough i had written a cookbook before but nobody would know that and having a mother and grandmother was a fantastic look into the enormously blessed with only boys when they got married i thought all of these family traditions and recipes will get lost because my boys are boys and will not be cooking so i made a cookbook of family favorites and gave it to the daughters of what that meant i had five copies that has been greatly expanded from that time that the other amazing thing that happened is my love of cooking and sharing the family table was passed on to my sons and they actually do cook. said in this cookbook are some recipes from my son josh or craig who likes to cook soups so the food fortunately it did get passed down a little bit to my son's so that is how which started after the campaign was over meissen josh said
" published by oxford stanford law professor jenny martinez is the author. you are watching booktv on c-span2. >> on your screen is a new book him called the romney's family table. when did you find time to put this together? >> oddly enough i had written a cookbook before but nobody would know that and having a mother and grandmother was a fantastic look into the enormously blessed with only boys when they got married i thought all of these family traditions and recipes will...
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Dec 22, 2016
12/16
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eye 21
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you would pass the agrarian law to redistribute property so how you would respond people up in crucial to that project is a new conception its and he describes this to make and sell somebody to exemplify a headache can become well informed based on informed consent. >> gcs himself as an examplexame with the idea of the national teacher that is of monticello is supposed to be in the of 48 there is point -- paintings and sculptures with the idea that is what he brings back to show to people.obvi >> but i am curious to spend a lot of time extended family and did you come to a different understanding? some talk about when he goes one to france was felice domesticated. what does that mean? >> jefferson add a reputation to be anti-slavery one in brazilian man in his 20s to talk about the evils of the slave trade and as a young legislature add these emancipation plan and he wrote about this about to being anti-slavery and he sees anywhere that you go to say at least we are not like that. [laughter] that was his attitude with that revolutionary period there is unrest with but we have problems
you would pass the agrarian law to redistribute property so how you would respond people up in crucial to that project is a new conception its and he describes this to make and sell somebody to exemplify a headache can become well informed based on informed consent. >> gcs himself as an examplexame with the idea of the national teacher that is of monticello is supposed to be in the of 48 there is point -- paintings and sculptures with the idea that is what he brings back to show to...
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61
Oct 15, 2013
10/13
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when did human rights laws start part of the discussion on the slave trade? >> really around the turn of the 19th century. it's interesting. people think that international human right law is a product of the 120th century. many most of the conventional account people say it was after world war ii. the holocaust happened, news of that came out a bunch of things happened after world war ii. this was the trial of the nazi war krill. similar trial in the far east. the u.n. was founded, universal declaration of human rights. everyone said it's when international law started to look at human rights issues. in my book, i say no it was earlier. it was in connection with with the slave trade. in the early 19th century starting in 18 -- britain was another -- and began to spread throughout the countries that had been engaged in the slave trade. this is no longer a practice they wanted to participate in. it was perceived as violating natural rights. same idea of rights that underpin the u.s. revolution and the revolution in france. the declaration of independence. we h
when did human rights laws start part of the discussion on the slave trade? >> really around the turn of the 19th century. it's interesting. people think that international human right law is a product of the 120th century. many most of the conventional account people say it was after world war ii. the holocaust happened, news of that came out a bunch of things happened after world war ii. this was the trial of the nazi war krill. similar trial in the far east. the u.n. was founded,...
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101
Jan 13, 2013
01/13
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eye 101
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been a hit among the mormons was a good law and will ever be overturned? >> fact is an interesting issue. in chicago you also could not appear in public if you are ugly. [laughter] a former colleague with major neurological disability is found he could not walk down the street. if a religion came forward today as was the case with the church of latter day saints in the 1870's and he will let them know no substantial burden but it should have been. now i think sex equality if it was limited to men absolutely. there is a case where the university lost their tax exemption so similarly they could not collaborate but i practice of polyandry the administratively is impossible because it creates sony layers of families but the administrative difficulty has to be really extreme there is one case that i know of where native american family refuses to give their number a social security number. but they said that is so fundamental comintern's out she was given one anyway. but you have to go out far on a limb. reynolds's the case where a polygamous may and lhere a po
been a hit among the mormons was a good law and will ever be overturned? >> fact is an interesting issue. in chicago you also could not appear in public if you are ugly. [laughter] a former colleague with major neurological disability is found he could not walk down the street. if a religion came forward today as was the case with the church of latter day saints in the 1870's and he will let them know no substantial burden but it should have been. now i think sex equality if it was...
0
0.0
Oct 9, 2023
10/23
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government doesn't give our consent for all the talk for the one asking me and consent to pay taxes for the law and if slavery has a authority and why isn't government the same and garrison became on ab list ick ground ane sessionist ground and aso lot of libertarian ntsb 19th century united states awe socialists as their allies and socialists as basing their views on the same kind of world principles of libertarians. >> we think government is unjustly taken and with the coming over to the second wave and this is all what we call first wave libertarian. second wave libertarian doesn't start till about the 1930s. now we're talking primarily about the united states. >> people coming from soviet union and frederick from austria and all the action here is sentedderred in the united states and what's sparking this reemergence and libertarian 20td >> if you think about the reasoning that led them to that conclusion, it's not completely alien and most of us believe democracy has its limits and there's certaine things that just shouldn't be up for a vote. the competition does and ought to prohibit that
government doesn't give our consent for all the talk for the one asking me and consent to pay taxes for the law and if slavery has a authority and why isn't government the same and garrison became on ab list ick ground ane sessionist ground and aso lot of libertarian ntsb 19th century united states awe socialists as their allies and socialists as basing their views on the same kind of world principles of libertarians. >> we think government is unjustly taken and with the coming over to...
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Jul 26, 2019
07/19
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eye 22
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the laws are not boycotts. but as they themselves date that doing business, it is boycotts yes but people that going to be sick because they don't want to rent to a defense contract. that is understood so is not the state of israel but for example the air b&b who has more open and discussed issues who have the boycott small rental units small accommodations that were listing them and how is that different people based on sexual orientation quick. >> so the primary boycott would be our view and those secondary. >> a diff friends how you define primary or secretary on - - secondary the primary target is exactly what is done exactly like the arab leave boycott and those that do business with the government with the state of israel here the first order of target of companies that happen to be operating are doing business that's either going after. >> so let me ask you do you believe that boycott is political speech and should be protected quick. >> boycott is another word for refusing to do business and the supreme
the laws are not boycotts. but as they themselves date that doing business, it is boycotts yes but people that going to be sick because they don't want to rent to a defense contract. that is understood so is not the state of israel but for example the air b&b who has more open and discussed issues who have the boycott small rental units small accommodations that were listing them and how is that different people based on sexual orientation quick. >> so the primary boycott would be our...
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148
Sep 30, 2011
09/11
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eye 148
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we need good laws. we need in effective court system. there should not be this redistribution of wealth and deciding which energy is better than what. that is not what the government should be doing. >> thank you. i come from brazil. we are achieving quite success and economic development. government taxes reach people. they say they're getting $100 per month. the of putting more people into the market and getting an extra 1% a year. did they say something about digging a hole? countries like china and brazil are following this lesson. we make a lot of public works. given that some are not necessary, we have a very good fiscal situation now. even today there meeting in washington to decide how much money they are relaying to the union. >> i think brazil will have severe economic problems not far in the future. you state the history is a mecca less than the united states. i think brazil will not dwell long term. i do not know what you're talking about in china. china has basically two different economies. they have a privatized economy wi
we need good laws. we need in effective court system. there should not be this redistribution of wealth and deciding which energy is better than what. that is not what the government should be doing. >> thank you. i come from brazil. we are achieving quite success and economic development. government taxes reach people. they say they're getting $100 per month. the of putting more people into the market and getting an extra 1% a year. did they say something about digging a hole? countries...
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34
Aug 22, 2015
08/15
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eye 34
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that was the first day of law school. there are still too many lawyers, the profession is overcrowded and too large and not needed, there's too many of us. in the private sector they're far more lawyers in the public sector, nonprofits, public interest lawyers, we need lawyers were willing to work for nonprofits, work for inmates who are wrongfully convicted there are thousands of people in prison who don't have access to lawyers, the cases are hopeless. there is a is a lot of dnieper lawyers in society but those jobs aren't of a lot of interest usually. the big firm, the model a big law, to go work with an associate in big firms and put in 100 hour weeks for seven or eight years, you make partner, that novel is still there, i'm not sure it is what it once was. one big change the last 25 years is the proliferation of television advertisement. to me it's very unseemly and a lot of it bears on the faults, it's changed a lot in the last 25 years. some things have changed, some things have not changed in the professor. host:
that was the first day of law school. there are still too many lawyers, the profession is overcrowded and too large and not needed, there's too many of us. in the private sector they're far more lawyers in the public sector, nonprofits, public interest lawyers, we need lawyers were willing to work for nonprofits, work for inmates who are wrongfully convicted there are thousands of people in prison who don't have access to lawyers, the cases are hopeless. there is a is a lot of dnieper lawyers...
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Jun 21, 2015
06/15
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eye 68
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litigation trends in law firm, structural trends and applications for law school that are way down. i'm always watching trials. not him) the media, issues. the supreme court and gay marriage. what is going to happen? so keep up with the supreme court. that's my curiosity and what i enjoy doing and what i understand. take that what i find something really good and using a novel. that is the stories come from. something i can take a steel >> host: a one off question, do you think the supreme court should be televised? >> guest: never even thought about that. i don't like cameras and courtrooms because i really despise cameras and courtrooms because it cheap is the process. it turns -- it gives a bias to so many people who should not care. allows the lawyers to act often times or embellish. it creates stars out of judges. i think it's cool to be able to watch the supreme court were things are formal, lawyers behave or get kicked out and then watch the justices interact for all of us to see. i am intrigued by that. i would like to see a trial once or twice, good case and televised. i th
litigation trends in law firm, structural trends and applications for law school that are way down. i'm always watching trials. not him) the media, issues. the supreme court and gay marriage. what is going to happen? so keep up with the supreme court. that's my curiosity and what i enjoy doing and what i understand. take that what i find something really good and using a novel. that is the stories come from. something i can take a steel >> host: a one off question, do you think the...
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20
Dec 29, 2019
12/19
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eye 20
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maybe i would do that and go to law school. it was terrible working 36 hours i decided i had such a bad experience i need to try to be a writer that's what i need to try to do so i applied to the writing program and i got the fellowship and it made it possible for me to go. so i approach that that i would come out of it with a book deal. >> but the first moment you thought you would be a writer as a vocation was at the cafÉ? writing what was happening to you. >> yes. >> that sense of freedom is a familiar trope writing about europe and just realizing for the first time not everybody reacted to your black hood. >> that took me more years to realize to fully articulate but i would often eat at kebab shops i remember walking in one late-night the man started speaking to me in arabic and i said what? and they said he's teaching your language what are your origins? i said my dad is from texas my mom is from california he said where you from? i said i'm black he said you're not black michael jordan is black so then i had to explain
maybe i would do that and go to law school. it was terrible working 36 hours i decided i had such a bad experience i need to try to be a writer that's what i need to try to do so i applied to the writing program and i got the fellowship and it made it possible for me to go. so i approach that that i would come out of it with a book deal. >> but the first moment you thought you would be a writer as a vocation was at the cafÉ? writing what was happening to you. >> yes. >> that...
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102
Jun 29, 2009
06/09
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eye 102
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would change its law. it could, it could change if germany would change its law, if france would change its laws. that doesn't seem to be the case because they're leaning toward executive compensation. by the way i am not a proponent of trying to stifle the free market. i want to see people make as much as they can, but i don't want to see people at aig driving company into the ground and then walk away with huge bonuses. there's something wrong with this and the american people know there's something wrong with it and they are going to chastise us if we don't do something about it. they really are. i appreciate the notion there are other places for people to go but they won't find what they find in the united states of america. and those who want the autoworkers and ford, chrysler and gm salaries comparable to nissan and toyota, they don't look at what the salaries of those ceos at nissan and 20 ruda are making. their salaries are not in line with the salaries of the american auto industry executives in t
would change its law. it could, it could change if germany would change its law, if france would change its laws. that doesn't seem to be the case because they're leaning toward executive compensation. by the way i am not a proponent of trying to stifle the free market. i want to see people make as much as they can, but i don't want to see people at aig driving company into the ground and then walk away with huge bonuses. there's something wrong with this and the american people know there's...
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Jul 6, 2015
07/15
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>> how is law profession changed? my first day of law school in august of 197936 years ago 78. we had sold to thought -- we were told the profession was overcrowded, we would not needed. you lucky to find jobs. there were too many of us. i was the first day of law school. there are still too many lawyers. the professions overcrowded. and a lot of lawyers are not needed. there's just too many of them in the private sector. we need far more lawyers in the public sector nonprofits on the public interest lawyers we need more lawyers who are willing to work for nonprofits will work for inmates were wrongfully convicted. there are thousands of innocent people in prison no access to lawyers for the cases are helpless. a lot of need for lawyers in our society with those jobs don't attract a lot of interest usually. the big firms that model big law, you go to work as an associate for the big firms. put in a hundred hour weeks 70 years and you make partner. that model is still there. i'm not sure it is what it once was. one big chains and lastly five years has been the proliferation of t
>> how is law profession changed? my first day of law school in august of 197936 years ago 78. we had sold to thought -- we were told the profession was overcrowded, we would not needed. you lucky to find jobs. there were too many of us. i was the first day of law school. there are still too many lawyers. the professions overcrowded. and a lot of lawyers are not needed. there's just too many of them in the private sector. we need far more lawyers in the public sector nonprofits on the...
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Aug 29, 2009
08/09
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the rule of law, reasonable tax system and respect of property. destroy the basis of private property, you don't have a rule of law because it is unpredictable and you don't have entrepreneurship, you have no growth, as simple as that. this has been veryften described more as an intuition than by facts. we now have fact we can compare, we can compare countries where entrepreneurship has been destroyed in the name of communism. rule of law has been erased, private property has been destroyed, taxes have been too high conlan and as our consequence you have no growth. this principle which is tremely important is innovation. innovation is the only engine for growth. there is no other engine for growth. so you need to go a little bit further to try to understand the conditions for innovation. the united states are a pioneer in innovation because of the very specific conditions, which is basically the relationship betwn the university, the academics and the business of unity. this is quite unique in the world. if you look at fundamental research, fundam
the rule of law, reasonable tax system and respect of property. destroy the basis of private property, you don't have a rule of law because it is unpredictable and you don't have entrepreneurship, you have no growth, as simple as that. this has been veryften described more as an intuition than by facts. we now have fact we can compare, we can compare countries where entrepreneurship has been destroyed in the name of communism. rule of law has been erased, private property has been destroyed,...
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Sep 30, 2013
09/13
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when did the human rights law will start becoming part of this discussion on the slave trade? >> around the turn of the century but what's interesting is people think that international human rights law is a product of the 20th century in most of the conventional accounts people say was right after world war ii. so the holocaust happened. as news of that came out, things happened after world war ii. there were the nuremberg trials and nazi war criminals. the u.n. was founded, universal declaration of human rights. that's the moment everyone says this is when the international law started to look at the human rights issues. in my book i said it was earlier. it was in connection with the slave trade that the international law was used for the human rights purpose. so in the early 19th century starting in 1807 or 1808 when countries like the u.s., britain was another country to ban the trade around them and it began to spread throughout the countries that had been engaged in the trade but this is no longer practice that they want to purchase feet in. it was perceived as violating
when did the human rights law will start becoming part of this discussion on the slave trade? >> around the turn of the century but what's interesting is people think that international human rights law is a product of the 20th century in most of the conventional accounts people say was right after world war ii. so the holocaust happened. as news of that came out, things happened after world war ii. there were the nuremberg trials and nazi war criminals. the u.n. was founded, universal...
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Oct 28, 2018
10/18
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professor for national security at columbia law school and the human rights foundation. each have contributed a long essay to this volume on which the free world was built. on the fritz of the liberal democracy it stands out not only for the multitude of threats to the liberal world order and offering possible solutions. the contributors to the project are optimistic and having a fresh discussion on the values and basic principles such as freedom of speech, the free press and fofreepress and for w, democracy can be brought back to health. to begin the conversation please join me in giving a warm welcome to the dream team of panelists with their command of history the mastery of foreign policy and familiarity to guide us through the regaling minefield of what they see as a global assault on democracy. thank you all for being here today. [applause] thank you for setting the expectations so low for us. it's a delight to be here at the foreign policy center it is great to be back with such a distinguished group of colleagues. let me read a few words from the democracy manife
professor for national security at columbia law school and the human rights foundation. each have contributed a long essay to this volume on which the free world was built. on the fritz of the liberal democracy it stands out not only for the multitude of threats to the liberal world order and offering possible solutions. the contributors to the project are optimistic and having a fresh discussion on the values and basic principles such as freedom of speech, the free press and fofreepress and...
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Dec 24, 2020
12/20
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property, trade laws, tax laws, labor. all of the things that allow the very, very rich two and a sense, take more than their fair share, over a period of decades. and, still and people come along like you, and you say we ought to think about the wealth tax, we ought to think about more progressive taxation. people say wait a minute, that's punishing success. these people, right this is what you just said, that the perception is that the people who have done extraordinarily well are and have done so because they have worked really hard to get where they are. they are, you know, have taken advantage of the opportunities that are available. anybody could have done that right? so my question to you is, and this is a question that came up and was proposed to some of the presidential candidates in the democratic party. to get some people in trouble. and going to pose it to you and feel free to dance around it. should billionaires exist? >> the idea that the tax system or the ideal tax system that i describe is that billionaires
property, trade laws, tax laws, labor. all of the things that allow the very, very rich two and a sense, take more than their fair share, over a period of decades. and, still and people come along like you, and you say we ought to think about the wealth tax, we ought to think about more progressive taxation. people say wait a minute, that's punishing success. these people, right this is what you just said, that the perception is that the people who have done extraordinarily well are and have...
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Jun 2, 2013
06/13
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whereby the british law agreed that belgium was permanently neutral. then it was announced that the german army would attack france through belgium. the government said they would send a formal note notifying them to send the army through them. so why do they have not done so? when the german army nonetheless on august the second, 1914, when they marched into belgium, they came to belgium and he said, here we are, we are neutral with the makeup and the german army is watching them. belgium changed everything. they say if we care anything about international law, stability of europe, just stand there and watch. watch while the germans rape elgin. i believe that this is the right course. now, what changed in the years that followed? well, the first world war became such a dreadful experience for everyone. a huge number of people began to say up up up, up what became known as this takeover. and this was something that they took the view that something was happening so dreadful. almost anything was better up up up up up but how do you pack it in? not it is
whereby the british law agreed that belgium was permanently neutral. then it was announced that the german army would attack france through belgium. the government said they would send a formal note notifying them to send the army through them. so why do they have not done so? when the german army nonetheless on august the second, 1914, when they marched into belgium, they came to belgium and he said, here we are, we are neutral with the makeup and the german army is watching them. belgium...
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Mar 8, 2024
03/24
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>> there is some conflict between the state laws. the laws that mandate and the products flow pretty freely across the orders so it would be impossible for us to comply with the law when you have that kind of labeling conflict. that is just one example. >> that is a good example o why it would be where we need to go here. it's something that sounds pretty simple and can complicate things. thank you very much. >> thank you. our colleagues here are very much involved in the national governors association and there isthere's an entity within the association that enables ideas what's working and what's not working and they have a word for the committee that does that. i would remind us it's not just the private sector issue. the states have a dog in this fight and we senator o-uppercase-letter the governor of west virginia when i was born and rumor has it that she has that might end up being governor of west virginia in the future. so we want to keep an eye of what needs to be done. i appreciate the opportunity. thank you to the witnesse
>> there is some conflict between the state laws. the laws that mandate and the products flow pretty freely across the orders so it would be impossible for us to comply with the law when you have that kind of labeling conflict. that is just one example. >> that is a good example o why it would be where we need to go here. it's something that sounds pretty simple and can complicate things. thank you very much. >> thank you. our colleagues here are very much involved in the...
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Dec 20, 2015
12/15
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university of georgia law professor is our guest on wednesday december 23rd at 8:30 eastern talking about her book, how the other half banks, exclusion exploitation and the threat to democracy. at 8:30 a.m. eastern on december 24th, political scholar joins us to talk about underdog politics, the minority party in the house of representatives, and friday december 25th, also at 8:30 author, historian describes his book, the final years of ronald regan. be sure to watch c-span's washington journal during author's week starting december 21st. ♪ >> john ferling is the professor at west georgia university and the author of several books of history. the book whirwind. what is the greatest misconception on the u.s. victory independence war? >> probably the greatest misconception that many people think that it was an uneasy victory or ene visit able victory but it was an eight-year war and to the very end in 1781 we were very close to losing the war, john adams was riding home from france and say if you don't score a decisive victory in 1781 then france is going to pull out and we won't get inde
university of georgia law professor is our guest on wednesday december 23rd at 8:30 eastern talking about her book, how the other half banks, exclusion exploitation and the threat to democracy. at 8:30 a.m. eastern on december 24th, political scholar joins us to talk about underdog politics, the minority party in the house of representatives, and friday december 25th, also at 8:30 author, historian describes his book, the final years of ronald regan. be sure to watch c-span's washington journal...
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Jul 1, 2013
07/13
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stanford law professor is the author. you are watching book tv on c-span2. >>> an appetite for wonder is the name of the book. the author, dr. richard dawkins who's written a best seller. dr. dawkins why did you choose to write an autobiography at this point? >> [inaudible] my mother is 96 and is a very useful resources to talk to and tapped her memory and has been a wonderful experience actually in effect interviewing her to write the book. it seemed like the right time to do it. this is in fact just the first half up to the age of 55 which marks a sort of natural watershed in my life and didn't make sense to divide it into book this is the first one taking you through the childhood school days, the university and after riding the selfish gene after the age of 35. >> why was the selfish gene and national to the connatural halfway point for you? >> it changed my life. before that i was an ordinary research scientist white coat and after the selfish gene i went on teaching and doing some research but i became i suppose mor
stanford law professor is the author. you are watching book tv on c-span2. >>> an appetite for wonder is the name of the book. the author, dr. richard dawkins who's written a best seller. dr. dawkins why did you choose to write an autobiography at this point? >> [inaudible] my mother is 96 and is a very useful resources to talk to and tapped her memory and has been a wonderful experience actually in effect interviewing her to write the book. it seemed like the right time to do...
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Aug 26, 2018
08/18
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perfectly lawful business. we're told she's got a higher this voyeur and he'll tell you this is the lobbyist you should hire and support the select it if they show in your get your deal. were just a little more straightforward about it. some of the anger and perplexity is because they really do not understand our laws and the way we do business. >> that's right. a lot of the foreign cooperators took a lot of explaining to make them understand that they had done before they could confess to their crimes. that sounds like the spanish inquisition are sent in. the use of wire fraud statute. they figured out. i'm the one they got was honest services fraud of which is often used on politicians. there's this theory that if you are an officer elected official that has some kind of code is tender, then you are beholden as an officer on the fiduciary level in the ethics code, then you are defrauding an institution you work for. it's true. that's the way you do business. but also you can tell somewhere deep down they knew
perfectly lawful business. we're told she's got a higher this voyeur and he'll tell you this is the lobbyist you should hire and support the select it if they show in your get your deal. were just a little more straightforward about it. some of the anger and perplexity is because they really do not understand our laws and the way we do business. >> that's right. a lot of the foreign cooperators took a lot of explaining to make them understand that they had done before they could confess...
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Feb 3, 2013
02/13
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you have to go to law school like everybody else and it does cost money so, but it's very difficult to see it as a lawyer because no african-american lawyer is going to have wide clients are very few will have white clients. most like people don't have a lot of money and if you have money and you are lack you hire a white lawyer because of course white voters will be more effective in a segregated society. so it's very very difficult to succeed as a black lawyer. >> why these six men? >> they have something in common. they are all one generation. they all wear the foot soldiers as you well. they were all the legal arm of the sabar is so just as the sabar rights movement was getting going in the 50s and 60's these particular lawyers were really at least -- of their careers and they became the evil arm of the sabar rights movement. >> kenneth author of the new book representing the raise the creation of the civil rights lawyer published by university harvard press. >> up next on booktv after words with this week's guest d'vera cohn. "what to expect when no one's expecting" america's comi
you have to go to law school like everybody else and it does cost money so, but it's very difficult to see it as a lawyer because no african-american lawyer is going to have wide clients are very few will have white clients. most like people don't have a lot of money and if you have money and you are lack you hire a white lawyer because of course white voters will be more effective in a segregated society. so it's very very difficult to succeed as a black lawyer. >> why these six men?...
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42
May 27, 2015
05/15
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it is heartbreaking to me to see students at this law school or any other law school graduating with a hundred and $50000 in debt or more. that is a millstone around the next that constrains the kinds of opportunities they can follow that takes away the freedom of exploring's different career paths. that is a terrible burden asking people to assume before they have even really started their careers. >> social spending. spending. social security food stamps are those investments as well? >> i don't think -- i think i think you have to break that category down. social security for example is a form of income security for seniors. it is not a strict insurance program. you don't get back what you pay. in fact if you are of modest means you get back a lot better deal than what you put into the system. if you are affluent you get the worst deal than what you put into the system. is an income security system for seniors and today it and medicare account for about 70 percent of all of the transfer payments that we make programs were there is a check a check was someone's name on it. about 70
it is heartbreaking to me to see students at this law school or any other law school graduating with a hundred and $50000 in debt or more. that is a millstone around the next that constrains the kinds of opportunities they can follow that takes away the freedom of exploring's different career paths. that is a terrible burden asking people to assume before they have even really started their careers. >> social spending. spending. social security food stamps are those investments as well?...
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23
Jun 1, 2020
06/20
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i am so pleased to introduce to my speakers professor of law at harvard law school in 2003 senior constitutional advisor over a transitional government and constitution the author of facebook the fall and rise of the islamic state as professor and contemporary of islamic thought at the civilization of looking at islam and politics in the modern middle east and the author of french and english of text on subject including a forthcoming book. tonight we will be discussing her book the arab winter the exploration of the contemporary middle east which challenges representation of the arab spring. citing those consequences with the egyptian revolution the syrian civil war the rise and fall for the islamic constitutionalism to identify the arab spring with the mass political action with unprecedented self-determination across the middle east her own observations the arab winter is a timely and insightful exploration of the arab spring by one of the foremost scholars and intellectuals of the united states were so honored to host this event tonight i will now turn things over. >>. >> good evening i am p
i am so pleased to introduce to my speakers professor of law at harvard law school in 2003 senior constitutional advisor over a transitional government and constitution the author of facebook the fall and rise of the islamic state as professor and contemporary of islamic thought at the civilization of looking at islam and politics in the modern middle east and the author of french and english of text on subject including a forthcoming book. tonight we will be discussing her book the arab winter...
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Sep 9, 2009
09/09
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but now we turned that upside down and the law is an instrument o partisan politics. and that worries me even more than higher taxes. [applause] >> i had a chance to talk with margaret thatcher out 10 years agobout my work in health reform. and she literally took me by the shoulders, and she said you must rememb the rule of law. there is nothing more important. >> next question. >> hold on. >> i'm concerned about the future and what inflation is going to do to us. w@at can we do to protect ourselves? give us some advice, please. >> well, i think that is a very worthy concern. particularly in light of fiscal and monetary policies. i would s in my judgment as i look out and think about the ne three to five years, it would be really at the top of my list. not that we haven't talked about anything but a long list of concerns. because if we get into that situation and that causes wage pressure, and every administratiol priority does what? we have a really great this point. every one of them that we have talked about today and we talked about earlier, including cap and trad
but now we turned that upside down and the law is an instrument o partisan politics. and that worries me even more than higher taxes. [applause] >> i had a chance to talk with margaret thatcher out 10 years agobout my work in health reform. and she literally took me by the shoulders, and she said you must rememb the rule of law. there is nothing more important. >> next question. >> hold on. >> i'm concerned about the future and what inflation is going to do to us. w@at...
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Mar 24, 2023
03/23
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when laws become enemies of man men become enemies of laws. [applause] and i will not, i will not, i will not ever in any government ever let them take away my rights away and i'll be a rebel from day one and i suggest you join me in that. [applause] in some ways these are very difficult times for conservatives in the english-speaking world. have to be frank. it's all well and good saying we won the house the midterms were a big disappointment. we need to look in the mirror and acknowledge that. glin other parts of the english world the conservative movement is in real trouble. going north to canada. did you like justin trudeau? the trouble is he is not a. he's in power and that's the problem i'm talking about. what he did to canadian truckers as be on should prepare -- people who live them side -- live within the law found themselveses out of the law and you can go to australia which has now become one at the richest places on earth. we can go to new zealand. hey there's some good news there. he is gone and that's a bit of the good news. and
when laws become enemies of man men become enemies of laws. [applause] and i will not, i will not, i will not ever in any government ever let them take away my rights away and i'll be a rebel from day one and i suggest you join me in that. [applause] in some ways these are very difficult times for conservatives in the english-speaking world. have to be frank. it's all well and good saying we won the house the midterms were a big disappointment. we need to look in the mirror and acknowledge...
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Mar 19, 2012
03/12
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moral imperatives of practice and how the government and political parties take them up and pass the laws that regulate the activity. >> if you would give as a snapshot of the european approaches to the embryonic politics. >> they are different and that is one of the fascinating things i think i've learned how different and unique our debates are here. for the simple the polarization between the religious conservatives and secular scientists. you don't have that the same degree in europe, so ironically you have a country like to germany where religion plays less of a role in the political sphere than in the night it states or france is perhaps an even more perfect example. countries where religion is less important than politics and yet the politics and regulations that emerged are more conservative and more restrictive. >> how does that happen? >> it has to do with the different historical legacy that shaped the debate on both sides of the atlantic and in the u.s. and some degree the u.k. its abortion which represents the frame of reference and that emerged gradually so that the issue of
moral imperatives of practice and how the government and political parties take them up and pass the laws that regulate the activity. >> if you would give as a snapshot of the european approaches to the embryonic politics. >> they are different and that is one of the fascinating things i think i've learned how different and unique our debates are here. for the simple the polarization between the religious conservatives and secular scientists. you don't have that the same degree in...
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Jun 29, 2009
06/09
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there are, you know, probably in most territories there are strong copyright laws and antipiracy laws. i think the challenge everywhere is enforcement, and, you know, at the end of the day if songwriters aren't going to get paid, you know, i think, you know, yes, there'll be some motivation, but there won't really be a structure, an industry structure that will support, you know, music that we love. and so, you know, i think it's of tremendous, you know -- and also the trade value, you know, the export value of american music is huge. the, you know, and there's a tremendous value, you know, to many foreign markets, and i think when we have something, for instance, in the u.s. where composers don't get paid when there's no performing right, for instance, in a download, just to differentiate, you know, from the performing right in the sound recording going back to a point i made earlier about when you download in the u.s. when you download a film or tv show, there's no performance income. well, foreign societies who represent composers whose songs and who are composing for, you know, fo
there are, you know, probably in most territories there are strong copyright laws and antipiracy laws. i think the challenge everywhere is enforcement, and, you know, at the end of the day if songwriters aren't going to get paid, you know, i think, you know, yes, there'll be some motivation, but there won't really be a structure, an industry structure that will support, you know, music that we love. and so, you know, i think it's of tremendous, you know -- and also the trade value, you know,...
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Nov 13, 2022
11/22
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the parliament started chanting the french national anthem, he said france fighting for rights and lawfulness, fighting for freedom. france shall always and forever be the soldier defending, asking nations those are the values. those are the virtues that drove those whom we honor today, those who made the ultimate sacrifice in the battles they fought for their nation and for democracy. these values and virtues, he made them strong, must because they guided their hearts. that that is the lesson we draw of the great war cannot be rancor and resentment against other nations, and it cannot be allowing the past to be forgotten. arguably, the great war is a foundation that obliges us to think forward to the future and think of our essential, which, as early as 1918, our predecessors or our forebears lay the founding lines of the first forms of international cooperation. they brought empires. they recognized many nations. they redrew national borders. they even dreamt at that time of a political europe. but humiliations, the spirit of revenge, the economic and moral crisis of those years fueled the
the parliament started chanting the french national anthem, he said france fighting for rights and lawfulness, fighting for freedom. france shall always and forever be the soldier defending, asking nations those are the values. those are the virtues that drove those whom we honor today, those who made the ultimate sacrifice in the battles they fought for their nation and for democracy. these values and virtues, he made them strong, must because they guided their hearts. that that is the lesson...
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Mar 17, 2014
03/14
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it is all over the law. 95 percent is a classical measure by scientists so when they have confidence that the fact that the regression analysis seems to establish. it is in tort law, jerry chiles discriminating because they have black people on the jury. it is all over the law. i assume that we do not ask for this to muck around with that number is i don't know what the consequences would be. reduce it. the same tests six times. now we reduced it from 5%. above 70 all the time. one one-hundredth of 1% to read is that what you want to have happened? >> let me just ask you. >> you are not right in some of the things he said. the last thing you said is not right. >> the last thing. >> the last thing is important. >> a nice thing is that important. my thinking to the last thing is dependent on my being renovated before. mri before? >> you are right that 95 percent is just generally speaking a feature that is widely adopted as a confidence level and particularly important here because the constitutional guarantee
it is all over the law. 95 percent is a classical measure by scientists so when they have confidence that the fact that the regression analysis seems to establish. it is in tort law, jerry chiles discriminating because they have black people on the jury. it is all over the law. i assume that we do not ask for this to muck around with that number is i don't know what the consequences would be. reduce it. the same tests six times. now we reduced it from 5%. above 70 all the time. one...
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Jan 23, 2012
01/12
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>> i know not a single saying. >> i thoughth that was a yale law professor. [laughter] he said it would never have been the read about it. >> that would be cool. [laughter] >> one of the more sensible remarks i have heard from washington d.c. all but cabinet positions have the chief of staff has direct is not in his staff. >> some people who were very important to members of the executive v branch your closeloe advisers.rs t the white house counsel counsel, head of the environmental quality a lot of people in the omb in people with close in the ada is the president when we've not talked about the cabinet but it should be those he feels very comfortable.e pe so without having thought about it before, i think that is a fair arrangement. and it is worth knowing about. of the people who are very, very important as close political advisers. >> chief of staff rituals for the d most part. >> unimagined if it is the president and somebody he does not like. >> losing track of theorn details. >> could you elaborate why is a ridiculous klaus? >> i don't saying one neces
>> i know not a single saying. >> i thoughth that was a yale law professor. [laughter] he said it would never have been the read about it. >> that would be cool. [laughter] >> one of the more sensible remarks i have heard from washington d.c. all but cabinet positions have the chief of staff has direct is not in his staff. >> some people who were very important to members of the executive v branch your closeloe advisers.rs t the white house counsel counsel, head of...
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0.0
Jan 1, 2023
01/23
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it reacts to the same laws of gases when it is power plan. stop, stop the airship becomes a free balloon. the airship pilot first be a competent balloon pilot and the balloonist can look back on over 150 years of proud tradition shared by many great and courageous men. he can look forward to a challenging future in the airship. lusty child of, the free balloon.
it reacts to the same laws of gases when it is power plan. stop, stop the airship becomes a free balloon. the airship pilot first be a competent balloon pilot and the balloonist can look back on over 150 years of proud tradition shared by many great and courageous men. he can look forward to a challenging future in the airship. lusty child of, the free balloon.
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Oct 10, 2019
10/19
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greatest american divorce will be published later this year mister french is a graduate of harvard law school for civil rights and education the veteran of operation iraqi freedom serving a senior counsel and for the alliance defending freedom. finally doctor kessler is a distinct professor of government at claremont mckenna college. a noted scholar of american constitutionalism and intellectualon history doctor kessler is the author of i am the change. in the editor of the federalist papers and this addition that he designs his constitutional studies class that i am involved. each gentleman will speak approximately ten minutes followed by a discussion and q&a with the audience mister french will speak first. please join me to welcome our panelist into our conversation what is conservativism in the age of trump. [applause] >> thank you to notre dame for hosting this is the second time i debated professor kessler in 2016 at a wonderful event you are fantastic host my only regret is i cannot go to the game on saturdaygo to see what football is like outside if it is 80 percent is good or
greatest american divorce will be published later this year mister french is a graduate of harvard law school for civil rights and education the veteran of operation iraqi freedom serving a senior counsel and for the alliance defending freedom. finally doctor kessler is a distinct professor of government at claremont mckenna college. a noted scholar of american constitutionalism and intellectualon history doctor kessler is the author of i am the change. in the editor of the federalist papers...
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Jun 5, 2018
06/18
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by local laws. and you don'tnoy gun permits are given out especially. and all the favoritism and discrimination. >> thank you for your comment. >> thank you very much professor stephen halbrook for all the work that you do and speaking today. my question how much of the bad policy like this seven round magazines or the famous interview with the congresswoman with a telescope stock is a result of ignorance of a large part of policymakers and how much is to suppress the ability of law-abiding people to defend themselves in the extremist barrios? with overreach? direct that is a good question. i don't doubt the sincerity of many people whatever side of the issue they take. people are very sincere. but i definitely think there is a deficit is knowledge about what we are talking about. anybody who thinks it is the panacea for crime to pass more laws that affect law-abiding people just don't get it there are many sincere people who think that but they don't know how to u another example there was a colora
by local laws. and you don'tnoy gun permits are given out especially. and all the favoritism and discrimination. >> thank you for your comment. >> thank you very much professor stephen halbrook for all the work that you do and speaking today. my question how much of the bad policy like this seven round magazines or the famous interview with the congresswoman with a telescope stock is a result of ignorance of a large part of policymakers and how much is to suppress the ability of...
197
197
Jan 23, 2012
01/12
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the law had to be signed. he wasn't around, so he directed someone to sign it within autocad. does that count as signing under article i, section seven cause? some people thought no. there are reasons to think that maybe ray. remember the debt ceiling debate? there is a question that was debated -- the secretary of treasury raised the possibility to not be the government itself. president obama can you know i really saved the debt ceiling using the authority of section four of the 14th amendment, which says the public that the united states shall not be questioned. [laughter] you know, advice to constitution writers to passive voice is not really a good tool for constitutional draft and i don't think. i looked into that some and i think there is no way president obama could use that provision to base the date unilaterally. but it was that there is a possibility. recently there has been talk in the blogosphere about whether the occupied wall street movement as a sort of constitutional basement. he cause they think the article for coming which guarantees the state of the reform
the law had to be signed. he wasn't around, so he directed someone to sign it within autocad. does that count as signing under article i, section seven cause? some people thought no. there are reasons to think that maybe ray. remember the debt ceiling debate? there is a question that was debated -- the secretary of treasury raised the possibility to not be the government itself. president obama can you know i really saved the debt ceiling using the authority of section four of the 14th...
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45
Feb 22, 2015
02/15
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tourgee side of law in the case and it was a devastating law because the plessy v. ferguson case and ferguson is the judge in the original local case, the plessy v. ferguson case established the principle that became known as a separate but equal principle to separate but equal answer came from the law itself. it required that the railroad provide separate but equal and the law said equal but separate compartments for each raise. what does that mean by equal? the supreme court said, hey, if you want to sue that they're not keeping their end of the bargain, accommodation are not equal, go ahead and do that but we don't see anything on the face of this law that violates the 14th 14th a minute, which guarantees all citizens equal protection under the law. tourgee had made a series of very innovative arguments against this law. partly he brought back his old principle that the law must be colorblind. he said the law can't classify people as white or colored. it doesn't have that power. citizens are citizens. and then he went on to make a number of other points, includin
tourgee side of law in the case and it was a devastating law because the plessy v. ferguson case and ferguson is the judge in the original local case, the plessy v. ferguson case established the principle that became known as a separate but equal principle to separate but equal answer came from the law itself. it required that the railroad provide separate but equal and the law said equal but separate compartments for each raise. what does that mean by equal? the supreme court said, hey, if you...
41
41
Apr 26, 2014
04/14
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happening on booktv. >> marie breaux talks about the history of authors write and argues copyright law will need to be revisited in the future. this event was part of the tennessee williams new orleans
happening on booktv. >> marie breaux talks about the history of authors write and argues copyright law will need to be revisited in the future. this event was part of the tennessee williams new orleans
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Jan 16, 2018
01/18
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with those previous michigan laws made slavery possible to tacitly sanction slavery. so before there was slavery and then i felt that was the story i needed to tell. i was teaching and didn't know anything about it. i felt the access of knowledge was disrespectful and the people that came even before the abolitionist who lives of great suffering and sorrow but were heroic and they pushed for their freedom and banded together. once i had the good fortune to apply for ann arbor i got the money we just wanted to see what we could uncover with a history of detroit we spent a lot of time in the detroit public library that had an incredible list of materials. one was from ontario. and then she hit the archives in ontario finding out more information for our project. so we would see what we could find and through that was translating some of that information someone is french and german so transcribing the information all the documents and that fancy cursive i had a magnifying glass even to see what it said. so it took us a couple years to get to the point to say we have a s
with those previous michigan laws made slavery possible to tacitly sanction slavery. so before there was slavery and then i felt that was the story i needed to tell. i was teaching and didn't know anything about it. i felt the access of knowledge was disrespectful and the people that came even before the abolitionist who lives of great suffering and sorrow but were heroic and they pushed for their freedom and banded together. once i had the good fortune to apply for ann arbor i got the money we...